29 killed in Iraq car bombs against Shiites
BAGHDAD: A spate of car bombs in Shia majority areas of Iraq, including two blasts minutes apart at a popular bird market,...
BAGHDAD: A spate of car bombs in Shia majority areas of Iraq, including two blasts minutes apart at a popular bird market, killed at least 29 people on Friday, the latest in a spike in violence amid a political crisis.
The attacks, which left nearly 70 others wounded, primarily targeted marketplaces that are often crowded on Fridays, the weekly holiday in Iraq, and took the death toll from a week of violence to more than 100.
Twin explosions that struck at a bird market in the north Baghdad neighbourhood of Kadhimiyah, site of the shrine of a revered figure, killed at least 29 people and wounded 70 others, security and medical officials said.
The two car bombs were set off just after 9:00 am in the market, which is typically packed with people on a Friday.
Militants have targeted Baghdad's crowded bird markets in the past.
On February 1, 2008 -- also a Friday -- 100 people were killed by two explosions in such markets in central and east Baghdad.
The explosives were strapped to two mentally impaired women and then triggered by remote control in coordinated blasts, a top Iraqi security official said at the time.
And in the predominantly-Shia Iraqi province of Babil on Friday, two car bombs in the town of Shomali, south of Baghdad, killed 13 people and wounded 26 others, according to security and medical officials.
The first explosion went off on the town's outskirts, while the second was detonated in a market. Among the casualties were women and children, the medics said.
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